In 1899 Charles H. Duell wanted to close the U.S. patent office forever because he thought everything was already
explored.

About The DryCell

The DryCell from our printed DIY manual

This is the DryCell from our printed DIY manual. With this simple technique you can efficiently convert water into oxyhydrogen gas. The electrolysis of water is an old invention
and even works with materials from the hardware store. The gas is cheap to produce and environmentally friendly. It is flammable and contains more energy than crude oil or natural gas.

The principle is as ingenious as it is simple: All you need is mild soapy water and electricity for electrolysis (the best is from photovoltaic or wind power). The many narrow
steel plates give high efficiency. In between the plates there is a very mild soapy solution (3% soap in distilled water). By applying power to the plates, a large volume of
flammable gas is produced.

The energy naturally just comes from the water itself. Yes, water is full of energy. This is why we drink it. Thus the electrolysis is just a stimulus, like a piece of flint, a
cranking motor or a skipper setting sails. They all just unleash other (and much more powerful) energies. The gas can by ignited immediately and used e.g. for welding, heating or as an additive
in combustion engines to save fuel. We explain all these experiments in the printed DIY manual.